`runTransactions` call issues async deletions for transaction files. The previously issued transaction deletions
can race with the next call to `runTransactions`. Prevent this by waiting until all the pending transaction
deletions are funished in the beginning of `runTransactions`. Also make sure that all the pending transaction
deletions are finished before returning from `runTransactions`.
This should fix the issue on NFS when incompletely removed dirs may be left
after unclean shutdown (OOM, kill -9, hard reset, etc.), while the corresponding transaction
files are already removed.
Updates https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/162
The metricID->metricName entry can be missing in the indexdb after unclean shutdown
when only a part of entries for new time series is written into indexdb.
Recover from such a situation by removing the broken metricID. New metricID
will be automatically created for time series with the given metricName
when new data point will arive to it.
This fixes an issue when VictoriaMetrics doesn't see the restored data after the following operations:
1. Stop VictoriaMetrics.
2. Delete `<-storageDataPath>` dir.
3. Start VictoriaMetrics, then stop it.
4. Restore data from backup with `vmrestore`.
5. Start VictoriaMetrics.
`vmrestore` didn't delete properly empty dirs in `<-storageDataPath>/indexdb` because of the remaining `flock.lock` files in these dirs.
See the corresponding benchmark in Prometheus - 23c0299d85/tsdb/head_bench_test.go (L52)
The benchmark allows performing apples-to-apples comparison of time series search
in Prometheus and VictoriaMetrics. The following article - https://www.robustperception.io/evaluating-performance-and-correctness -
contains incorrect numbers for VictoriaMetrics, since there wasn't this benchmark yet. Fix it.
Benchmarks can be repeated with the following commands from Prometheus and VictoriaMetrics source code roots:
- Prometheus: GOMAXPROCS=1 go test ./tsdb/ -run=111 -bench=BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers
- VictoriaMetrics: GOMAXPROCS=1 go test ./lib/storage/ -run=111 -bench=BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers
Benchmark results:
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers/n="1" 272756688 364977 -99.87%
BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers/n="1",j="foo" 138132923 1181636 -99.14%
BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers/j="foo",n="1" 134723762 1141578 -99.15%
BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers/n="1",j!="foo" 195823953 1148056 -99.41%
BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers/i=~".*" 7962582919 8716755 -99.89%
BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers/i=~".+" 7589543864 12096587 -99.84%
BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers/i=~"" 1142371741 16164560 -98.59%
BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers/i!="" 9964150263 12230021 -99.88%
BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers/n="1",i=~".*",j="foo" 216995884 1173476 -99.46%
BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers/n="1",i=~".*",i!="2",j="foo" 202541348 1299743 -99.36%
BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers/n="1",i!="" 486285711 11555193 -97.62%
BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers/n="1",i!="",j="foo" 350776931 5607506 -98.40%
BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers/n="1",i=~".+",j="foo" 380888565 6380335 -98.32%
BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers/n="1",i=~"1.+",j="foo" 89500296 2078970 -97.68%
BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers/n="1",i=~".+",i!="2",j="foo" 379529654 6561368 -98.27%
BenchmarkHeadPostingForMatchers/n="1",i=~".+",i!~"2.*",j="foo" 424563825 6757132 -98.41%
The first column (old) is for Prometheus, the second column (new) is for VictoriaMetrics.
Prometheus was using 3.5GB of RAM during the benchmark, while VictoriaMetrics was using 400MB of RAM.
Production workload shows that the index requires ~4Kb of RAM per active time series.
This is too much for high number of active time series, so let's delete this index.
Now the queries should fall back to the index for the current day instead of the index
for the recent hour. The query performance for the current day index should be good enough
given the 100M rows/sec scan speed per CPU core.
Issues fixed:
- Slow startup times. Now the index is loaded from cache during start.
- High memory usage related to superflouos index copies every 10 seconds.